WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Treasury
Secretary nominee Steven Mnuchin said on Thursday he would work to
eliminate the need for offshore tax havens, as Democratic senators
accused the Wall Street veteran of using such vehicles to shelter hedge
fund money from the government.

In a confirmation hearing before the Senate Finance Committee,
President-elect Donald Trump's pick to lead the Treasury was attacked
for failing to promptly disclose he was a director of an offshore
business vehicle domiciled in the Cayman Islands and owned more than
$100 million in real estate.

Offshore tax havens used to shield income have become a symbol of the
growing divide between rich and average Americans. Democrats seized on
the disclosures, made late on Wednesday, to question Mnuchin's
qualifications to revamp the tax code.

"One does not go and create offshore entities at the end of the day
other than to avoid, in some form or fashion, the tax laws of the United
States. That's pretty simple," New Jersey Democratic Senator Robert
Menendez said.

"We have to decide whether that's necessarily the essence of what we
want as leadership," Menendez said.

Mnuchin, a former Goldman Sachs executive, hedge fund manager and
Hollywood film financier, said he moved his Dune Capital Partners LLC
registry to the Caymans to allow for some pension fund clients to invest
in his funds, not to avoid taxes.

But Mnuchin, 54, added that it "makes no sense" for the U.S. tax code to
encourage the use of such entities. "In the hedge fund world these are
only set up to make the accountants rich and I would love to work with
the IRS to close these tax issues that make no sense."

Among the incoming Trump administration's top economic priorities is a
massive tax reform effort aimed at lowering rates for businesses and
individuals and closing many deductions and credits.

Mnuchin, who insisted his last-minute disclosures were not intentional
but due to the complexity of his holdings, complicated federal forms and
a lawyer's advice that the real estate disclosure was not required, also
tried to clarify Trump's recent market-moving comments on the U.S.
dollar.

The Republican businessman-turned politician, who will be sworn in on
Friday, said in an interview published this week in the Wall Street
Journal that the dollar's strength was "killing us," prompting the
greenback to fall and gold prices to jump.

Steven Mnuchin testifies before a Senate Finance Committee
confirmation hearing on his nomination to be Treasury secretary in
Washington, U.S., January 19, 2017. REUTERS/Joshua Roberts

Mnuchin said he believed that Trump's remarks, which usurped a role
normally reserved for Treasury secretaries, referred to a short-term
spike in the dollar due to market factors, not its longer-term
value.

"The long-term strength over long periods of time is important" for
the dollar, Mnuchin said.

He also said he would like to see an increase in the U.S.
government's debt ceiling "sooner rather than later" to avoid
another standoff with Congress that could upset financial markets.

The current debt ceiling extension expires on March 15, but the
Treasury would not likely exhaust its borrowing capacity for several
more months after that.

'FORECLOSURE MACHINE'

Democrats had gone into Mnuchin's hearing perceiving him as one of
the more vulnerable Trump nominees, partly due to his involvement
with OneWest Bank, which he ran in the aftermath of the 2007-2009
financial crisis.

They hammered him for the 36,000 foreclosures that the bank pursued
after Mnuchin struck a lucrative deal with the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corp to absorb most of the losses from such actions.

Critics have described OneWest as a 'foreclosure machine' and
Senator Ron Wyden, the committee's top Democrat, criticized the
bank's automated "robo-signing" of foreclosure documents and
foreclosing on the widows of reverse mortgage holders.

Mnuchin argued that his bank was a "loan modification machine,"
offering payment reductions to 101,000 borrowers to try to keep them
in their homes, and said his turnaround of the failed IndyMac bank,
which became OneWest, saved thousands of jobs and homes.